How a Nuclear Meltdown Works

Image Gallery: Nuclear Meltdown DisastersReactor 2 sits dormant in the foreground at Pennsylvania's Three Mile Island nuclear power plant. See more pictures of nuclear meltdown disasters.
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“核危机”一词已成为同义词with worst-case scenarios. This is true whether you're talking about your boss' figurative meltdown in the office or the very real concerns surrounding such events as the 2011Fukushima Daiichinuclear power plant disaster.

Indeed, as nuclear power plants can't produce a Hiroshima-style nuclear detonation, a meltdown is about as bad as it gets. Numerous nuclear meltdowns have occurred throughout humanity's atomic age, though thankfully only four large-scale events have ever occurred at civilian plants. The first took place at the Swiss Lucens reactor in 1969. The Three Mile Island accident occurred a decade later, followed by Russia's Chernobyl disaster in 1986 and the Fukushima Daiichi mess in 2011.

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The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) ranks nuclear events on a scale of zero to seven, ranging from a mere deviation with no safety significance (level 0) to a major accident (level 7) such as Chernobyl in which widespread health and environmental damage occurs. Which creates deserted cities and landmarks of destruction like theelephant's foot.

Interestingly enough, neither the IAEA nor the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission officially recognizes the term "nuclear meltdown," but the words continue to inspire fear. In this article, we'll break down how anuclear reactorworks and how a meltdown can occur.

Don't worry too much over complex equations, because the whole situation ultimately comes down to heat. Properly controlled heat inside a reactor helps generate power. Out-of-control heat, on the other hand, can cause the reactor itself to melt and contaminate the surrounding environment with dangerous radiation.

Now head to the next page to learn what happens inside a healthy reactor.

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Inside a Functional Nuclear Reactor

This is an overview of a nuclear power plant, butstep inside and take a tourto see how one works.
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Heat makes all the difference. That's the key in understanding how a healthynuclear reactorworks and how a meltdown occurs in a compromised one.

First, let's look at a basic coal-burning power plant: We burn coal to create heat. That heat boils water into expanding, pressurized steam that heads to a turbine, which spins a generator to produce that valuable spark.

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A nuclear power plant operates similarly, only the heat comes from aninduced fission reactionthat occurs in the reactor.Fissionrefers to when a material's atoms steadily split in two, releasing a lot of energy and a heat we calldecay heat. See, uranium and other radioactive elements already undergospontaneous fissionat very slow rates without any human help. In a nuclear power plant, operators artificially spur on, or induce, that fission reaction by bombarding the uranium-filled fuel rods with neutrons from prior fission reactions. This means more heat to boil water into steam.

Of course, you don't want temperatures inside the nuclear reactor to rise too high, lest they damage the reactor and release harmfulradiation. So, the coolant (often water) inside the reactor's core also serves to moderate the temperature of the nuclear fuel rods.

It's like driving an automobile: You don't want to overheat the engine, because that could damage it. The difference, however, is that you can turn off a vehicle and allow its engine to cool off. A car only generates heat while it's running and possibly for a short time after.

The radioactive materials inside a nuclear reactor, however, are a different story. The uranium and even radiated tools and parts will continue to generate decay heat even if plant operators shut down all induced fission reactions. Which they can do in minutes flat.

On the next page, we'll go inside a nuclear meltdown.

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Inside a Nuclear Meltdown

As we discuss what a nuclear meltdown is, it's also important to talk about what a nuclear meltdown isn't. It's not anuclear explosion. Nor will a meltdown burn a hole through the center of the Earth, as popularized in the 1979 disaster film "The China Syndrome."

In a nuclear meltdown, we're faced with a reactor burning out of control, to the point where it sustains damage from its own heat. Typically, this stems from aloss of coolant accident(LOCA). If coolant circulation through thereactorcore slows or stops altogether, the temperature goes up.

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The first things to melt are the fuel rods themselves. If plant personnel can restore coolant circulation at this point, the accident qualifies as apartial nuclear meltdown. The 1979 Three Mile Island incident falls under this categorization: The Unit 1 reactor's core melted, but the protective casing around the core remained intact. In fact, the Three Mile Islandnuclear powerplant's Unit 2 reactor continues to produce power in the shadow of its deactivated counterpart.

If left unchecked, however, a partial nuclear meltdown can worsen into atotal nuclear meltdown. Such situations become a race against time as emergency teams attempt to cool off the core remnants before they melt through the layers of protective casing and even the containment building itself. In 1986, Russian teams chased the melted remnants of the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant's reactor core into the facility's basement, flooding it with water to cool off the materials before they could burn through the containment building and pollute the groundwater.

In March of 2011,Japan's Fukushima Daiichi nuclear facilityexperienced a loss of coolant accident when a powerful earthquake damaged the backup generators that supplied power to the plant's water coolant pumps. The events that followed illustrate some of the additional complications that can occur during a nuclear meltdown.

在福岛第一核电站的一些overheate辐射d reactors (the facility had six) began to split the water into oxygen and hydrogen. The resulting hydrogen explosions breached the secondary containment structures (or second level of protection) of at least three reactors, allowing even more radiation to escape. A subsequent explosion rocked a unit so hard that it damaged a reactor's primary containment structure.

So how do you stop a nuclear meltdown from occurring or growing worse? Find out on the next page.

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How to Stop a Nuclear Meltdown

Highly radiated helicopters used to dump concrete and water on the Chernobyl reactor in 1986 lay in a field near the Ukrainian village of Rosoha.
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Again, nuclear meltdowns come down to heat and the vital need for an operating coolant system to keep conditions in check. TheFukushima Daiichi disasterreminds us that this system is critical even if all fission activity has been shut down. The Japanese plant automatically submerged the fuel rods when increased seismic activity occurred, effectively stopping all fission reactions within 10 minutes. But those rods still generated decay heat that required a functional coolant system.

This is also why high-level radioactive waste, such as irradiated or used nuclear reactor fuel, poses such a concern. It takes tens of thousands of years for these materials to decay to safe radioactive levels. During much of this time, they'll require a coolant system or sufficient containment measures. Otherwise, they'll burn through anything you put them in.

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Pastnuclear powerplant designs have proven even more prone to meltdowns, however. At the time of the respective accidents, the Fukushima Daiichi and Three Mile Island power plants used water not only as a coolant but also as amoderator. A moderator decreases the speed of fast neutrons, making them more likely to collide with fissionable fuel components and less likely to collide with nonfissionable fuel components. In other words, a moderator increases the likelihood that fission will occur in the reactor. When the water drains from the core of such a reactor, therefore, fission automatically stops.

Chernobyl, on the other hand, used solid graphite as a moderator. If the coolant drains away, the moderator remains behind. As such, loss of water in a Chernobyl-type reactor can actually increase the rate of fission.

In order to prevent a loss of coolant accident from turning into a meltdown, plant operators have to cool down the reactor's core. This means flushing more coolant through the overheating fuel rods. The newer the fuel rods are, the faster this cooldown will occur.

If a partial meltdown begins to occur, the rods willslump. If unchecked, the slumping rods will then melt and pool at the bottom of the reactor core in a large molten sludge. That radioactive sludge would pose an even greater cooling challenge. Not only is it a single mass (as opposed to several independent rods), one side of it is pressed against the bottom of the reactor core, steadily burning through it via the heat it produces.

In Chernobyl's case, emergency teams pumped in hundreds of tons of water to cool the reactor core. Next, they dumped boron, clay, dolomite, lead and sand on to the burning core by helicopter to put out the fires and limit the radioactive particles rising into the atmosphere. In the months that followed, they encased the ruined plant in a concrete shielding often referred to as asarcophagus.

Again, nuclear power plants ultimately boil down to heat generation, and their maintenance depends on proper regulation of that heat. If coolant systems fail, conditions can steadily burn out of control.

Explore the links on the next page to learn even more about nuclear power.

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More Great Links

  • 阿摩司,乔纳森。在日本“长期的游戏an nuclear plant." BBC News March 29, 2011. (April 5, 2011)http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-12896690
  • "Chernobyl Accident." World Nuclear Association. March 2011.http://www.world-nuclear.org/info/chernobyl/inf07.html
  • Chua-Eoan, Howard. "How to Stop a Nuclear Meltdown." TIME. March 12, 2011. (April 5, 2011)http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,2058615,00.html
  • Grier, Peter. Meltdown 101: What is a nuclear reactor meltdown? Christian Science Monitor. March 14, 2011. (April 5, 2011)http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/2011/0314/Meltdown-101-What-is-a-nuclear-reactor-meltdown
  • "Japanese Flee As Nuclear Plant Warnings Grow Dire." NPR. March 15, 2011. (March, 15, 2011)http://www.npr.org/2011/03/15/134552919/stunned-japan-struggles-to-bind-its-wounds
  • Marder, Jenny. "Mechanics of a Nuclear Meltdown Explained." PBS Newshour. March 15, 2011. (April 5, 2011)http://www.pbs.org/newshour/rundown/2011/03/mechanics-of-a-meltdown-explained.html
  • Sobel, Michael. "Nuclear Accidents." Brooklyn College. (April 5, 2011)http://academic.brooklyn.cuny.edu/physics/sobel/Nucphys/acc.html
  • Sorenson, Kirk. "Explainer: What Caused The Incident At Fukushima-Daiichi." Forbes. March 15, 2011. (March, 15, 2011)http://blogs.forbes.com/christopherhelman/2011/03/15/explainer-what-caused-the-incident-at-fukushima-daiichi/
  • "World Nuclear Power Reactors & Uranium Requirements." World Nuclear Association. March 2, 2011. (March 15, 2011)http://www.world-nuclear.org/info/reactors.html
  • Zyga, Lisa. How does a nuclear meltdown work? Physorg.com. March 17, 2011. (April 5, 2011)http://www.physorg.com/news/2011-03-nuclear-meltdown-video.html

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